MESOTHELIOMA LAW FIRM |
Dixie Hansen's
Inside The Met Gala 2014 Zoo: Charles James Beyond Fashion
The 2014 Metropolitan Museum Constitute Gala was a stunner. The exhibition is dedicated to the dresses of Charles James, an English-born designer who moved to New York in 1940. This year was the year for the artistry of couture, the glamour of fabric, and the power of the female form.
Giant rose sculpture of James figure with de-constructed dress |
Wearing Alexis Mabille couture: corseted bustier with skirt in white silk jersey and grey satin jacket |
The Vogue greeters |
THE EXHIBIT
Cocktail hour with velvet sofas, champagne and the beautiful Met Museum |
Co-Chairs Sarah Jessica Parker and Bradley Cooper introduce the evening |
One of the perks of a Friends of the Costume Institute corner table, the "backstage" view |
The room was filled with gardenias, including table top |
Frank Ocean performed with an all female orchestra in top hats |
After party at the Boom Boom room at The Standard Hotel |
Best date ever! With Alexis Mabille leaving the after party |
Though The Met Gala has become a zoo of celebrities and hype, this exhibition is truly worthy. The intricate detailing of these dresses is inspiring and transcendent. My hope is that all of the press and chaos that now surrounds this event actually bring into the museum the hoards of people who pour over the fashion and glamour of it all. This is a world-class museum with the most amazing collections and exhibitions, and I only can hope that the art does not get lost in the crowds.
A Life of Privilege
The art of Eric Buterbaugh never goes unnoticed. (Photo courtesy of Stefanie Keenan www.stefaniekeenan.com) |
Last evening I had the privilege of hosting a dinner for P.S. Arts at my home in Los Angeles. I recently joined the Board of Trustees to this incredible organization, and it is most certainly my privilege to be even a small part of what they do. Public schools in Los Angeles and throughout California have lost almost all their arts education funding. P.S. Arts provides professional art teachers of all genres in underserved elementary schools throughout the Los Angeles area. These teachers from P.S. Arts work in the schools all day, all year. Reaching poverty level students who would never have a chance to take a ballet class, learn a music scale or hold a paint brush to canvas, P.S. Arts is enhancing the lives of over 15,000 children each year. I urge you to take a look at the facts of what P.S. Arts is doing and the impact that arts education has over students (http://psarts.org). And P.S. Arts is truly a map for how to bring arts education into your own community: arts education, a privilege that should be allowed to every child in the United States.
And what a beautiful night we had as the skies shone down upon us to celebrate and learn more about P.S. Arts and its endeavors. I am beyond grateful for my parents giving me the gift of arts education in my life, and I was surrounded by people who feel the same. That was a privilege indeed.
Hubs with the man that makes it happen, Patrick Herning, and the reason I have the privilege of being involved (Photo courtesy of Stefanie Keenan www.stefaniekeenan.com) |
Our guest speaker and former student Allison Luengas with Mort Gleberman, Rona Sebastian, Krsten Paglia (Executive Director) and Jennifer Leitch (Photo courtesy of Stefanie Keenan www.stefaniekeenan.com) |
My mentors! Maria Bell (President at Large) and Joshua B. Tanzer (Chairperson of the Board) (Photo courtesy of Stefanie Keenan www.stefaniekeenan.com) |
The amazing staff with Executive Director, Amy Shapiro (Photo courtesy of Stefanie Keenan www.stefaniekeenan.com) |
The ladies that make it happen: Julia Sorken, Pamela Bergman (Immediate Past Chair), Leslie McMorrow and Maria Bell (Photo courtesy of Stefanie Keenan www.stefaniekeenan.com) |
Delta Airlines has been an important part of this year as well. Beyond a corporate sponsorship, they also sponsored the dinner including an elegant menu from their Executive Chef and a wine pairing by their Sommelier for International travel. My vegan plate was fresh, beautiful and tasty; and I have two new wine favorites: Ramey Ritchie Vineyard Chardonnay 2008 (we were told to taste it in ten years) and Copain Pinot Noir "Les Voisins" 2011.
(Photo courtesy of Stefanie Keenan www.stefaniekeenan.com) |
Modern Women meet Tea and Morphine: Women in Paris
I found the beautifully eerie exhibition at The Hammer Museum, Tea and Morphine: Women in Paris, 1880 to 1914, to be especially poignant. Focusing on morphine use during La Belle Epoch is quite mesmerizing, but focusing on women's use during the time is both alluring and sad. I learned that women were the majority of morphine users, while most of the artists during the time were men depicting these women. There is only one female artist in the exhibition, Mary Cassatt; her Tea drypoint of a woman listlessly drinking tea in her own self-induced haze. The connection between suffering prostitutes and high society ladies is clearly drawn, and it's something for us all to consider as women. Class only separates us with brick and mortar.
Profil de lumière (Profile of light) 1886 Odilon Redon |
Au bar (At the bar) 1897 Georges Alfred Bottini *society ladies at the bar - something most of us can relate to |
Mary Cassatt in the Louvre Museum of Antiquities 1879-80 Edgar Degas |
Tea 1890 Mary Cassatt *I just love the depiction of Cassatt by Degas compared to Cassatt's depiction of a woman having tea, stoned in her own world |
The Moulin Rouge 1895 Eugene Delatre *the forlorn prostitute on the streets of Paris in the rain |
Spring Cleansing: Closet to Soul
The best way to catch that fever is to start with a little cleansing. Yes, I love my green drinks, but sometimes some cleansing can come from the soul and the closet. So I started digging around my closet. In part because I had an assignment from Vogue China to present my couture collection to the magazine, but mostly due to the overwhelming need to purge and start anew. And purging the clothes in your closet may actually help purge the fillers in your head and allow you to lose the negativity in your life.
Clothes are a bit like friends. There are the staples in your life: the suit that you can never part with after you've worn it on a memorable occasion, the go to dress that will always make you smile and lift your spirits, the jeans that go everywhere you go no matter the location, and the evening gown that is so special that you keep it in a safe place where it will always be. These are the pieces you keep. These are the ammunition of your wardrobe, the building blocks. Then there are the items that just have to go: the dress you bought that you can't believe you ever brought into your house and much less wore, the hideous pair of trousers that make you look and feel your worst, the cheap frivolous top that doesn't work with anything, and the tattered jacket that you should have gotten rid of years ago.
My spring purging has begun. My closet is looking leaner and meaner. I'm ready to add some new pieces that will only enhance what I already have, match the work I do in arts advocacy and take me through whatever season Los Angeles has in store. Cleansed and ready!
Oh, and most of the shoes I kept after getting them cleaned up. Those friends are mine forever.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)